Wrestler Road Warrior Hawk dead at 46

FENWAY

Registered User
Forum Member
Apr 29, 2000
238
0
0
Road Warrior Hawk dead at 46

October 19, 2003
By GREG OLIVER -- Co-Producer, SLAM! Wrestling

roadwarrior_hawk.jpg



Road Warrior Hawk, one half of The Road Warriors, the most dominant tag team of all time, died early this morning in his sleep. Hawk, whose real name was Michael Hegstrand, was 46 years old.

He had been in the process of packing up and moving out of his condo with his wife, Dale. At about 8:30 pm, he complained about feeling extremely tired, and went to lay down. Believing that his exhaustion was due to the move and the excitement of the impeding move to Tampa, Florida, she didn't think anything of it and found him dead hours later.

The Road Warriors, Hawk and Animal (Joseph Laurinaitis), burst onto the wrestling scene in June 1983, claiming Georgia's National tag team titles in a tournament.

Hegstrand and Laurinaitis grew up in Chicago, meeting originally at age eight and becoming fast friends. At age 15, Laurinaitis' family moved to Minneapolis for work, and a short while later, Hegstrand's family did too.

The pair used to lift weights together in a Minneapolis gym. They were discovered by wrestler/trainer Eddie Sharkey in a restaurant, and Sharkey agreed to run a training camp. Laurinaitis, 6-foot-2, 285 pounds, debuted first as The Road Warrior in Georgia, a name and image derived from the Mel Gibson film of the same name. The 6-foot-3, 245-pound Hegstrand's first matches were actually in Vancouver for the All-Star Wrestling promotion, working under the name Crusher Von Haig. He drove to British Columbia from Minnesota with fellow Sharkey trainee 'Ravishing' Rick Rude, and left because he was homesick.

"I originally had my first three matches in Vancouver and puked after each one. I was not in wrestling shape," Hawk told Mike Parker of WrestlingEye.com in September 2001.


The pair reunited in Georgia as a tag team, and booker Ole Anderson decided to set them loose. The Road Warriors decimated opponents and had no equals. It was partially to hide their inexperience, but the domination made for a memorable run.

The team was initially managed by "Precious" Paul Ellering as a part of his stable called The Legion of Doom, which also included the Spoiler, and Jake Roberts. The moniker, Legion of Doom, later became synomous with the Road Warriors team itself.

"I have never seen wrestlers as completely vicious and overwhelming as these two men," Gordon Solie is quoted as saying in The Pictorial History of Wrestling. "Besides being tremendous athletes and incredible specimens, they have developed a bent and twisted attitude, rolling roughshod over everybody."

According to an interview in 1992 that he did with Wade Keller of the Pro Wrestling Torch, Hawk and Animal didn't know that they were going to be a major force in pro wrestling. "It took two years before we realized it," said Hawk. "We were hot from the beginning. It would have never happened without the guidance of Paul Ellering."

Unlike most wrestling managers, Ellering was a legitimate manager for the Road Warriors, booking their matches, lining up their flights, setting up hotel reservations and keeping track of their expenses.

From there, the Road Warriors hit the road and never looked back, winning the AWA, NWA and WWF tag titles during their career, along with the NWA World Six-Man titles with Dusty Rhodes on two occasions, and once with Genichiro Tenryu, and the NWA International tag title.

In 1992, Hawk abrupted left the WWF, unhappy with his pay, the time on the road and his treament. He lessened his schedule and took more Japan bookings, including a stint as The Hell Raisers with The Power Warrior (Kensuke Sasaki), which resulted in two IWGP Tag Team Titles.

The Road Warriors later re-teamed in 1996, and agreed to re-join the WWF in 1997. The team was re-launched a year later at WrestleMania XIV in Boston as LOD 2000, managed by Sunny. Up next was a new member of LOD in Darren Drozdov, and Hawk was booked as 'high and intoxicated', leading to an 80-fall from the TitanTron.

On December 18, 2002, the Road Warriors made an unexpected appearance on a NWA-TNA PPV. In May 2003, the Road Warriors made one last swing through the WWE, losing a match to Rob Van Dam and Kane.

Funeral arrangements for Hegstrand are not known at this time.
 
Last edited:

dogface

Registered STUD
Forum Member
Feb 13, 2000
2,719
22
0
54
Minnesota
Very sad, and even sadder I learned about it here first. I will be the first to say I was not best friends with Mike (Hawk) btut I did have the pleasure of knowing him...actually this kind of thing is really sad as the wrestler's that I have known seemed to be passing away way to early;

Rick Rood (Ravishing Rick Rude) I graduated with his brother and have been to his families MPLs bar a few times many years ago.

Kurt Henning (I played football with his brother in college)

Now Hawk: Know hime threw other wrestling affiliations, and hte gym he worked out in, as well as bars frequented.

One of my friends and former colleagues was good friends with Flyin Brian Pillman, they went to Ohio State together...said he was one of the best guys and craziest SOB you'd ever meet. Now passed on...

Truly tragic...


1019200341514PM94762.jpg


TSI

PS: If you are or were a wrestling fan, Mike was one half of the greatest and most entertaining tag teams of all time!
 
Last edited:

StevieD

Registered User
Forum Member
Jun 18, 2002
9,509
44
48
71
Boston
Very sad to read oh Hawks death. The Road Warriors where among the most entertaining tag teams of all time. He will be missed.
 

Butch

Registered User
Forum Member
Oct 20, 2003
4
0
0
Hawk and Animal both abused steroids and pain killers. Animal has been sick for a long time...was bedridden for quite a while...because of it, and Hawk wasn't in much better shape before his untimely death.

Liz OD'd, but she was also into the drug scene.

Most of these wrestlers who are dying in their 30's and 40's were steroid freaks, and too many wrestlers are into painkillers to help them keep pace with their hectic schedules.
 

FENWAY

Registered User
Forum Member
Apr 29, 2000
238
0
0
Heres more on the story and Hawk from pwtorch.com

Road Warrior Hawk, 46, dies in his sleep in Florida home

Mike Hegstrand, who wrestled since 1982 as Road Warrior Hawk, died at age 46 in his home Sunday morning, Oct. 19. The cause of death has not been determined. Hawk had developed a heart condition in the 1980s called "dilated cardiomyopathy," which is a possible cause of his death. Cardiomyopathy, simply put, is a disease where the heart becomes inflamed and doesn't work as well as it should. There are several types of the disease. It can be inherited or acquired. Most with the disease suffer congestive heart failure. Deadly blood clots can also form. Abnormal heart rhythyms may occur. Hegstrand, dating back to the 1980s, had difficulty passing physicals with state athletic commissions due to abrnormal heart rhythyms, a symptom of cardiomyopathy. Hegstrand got off steroids for stretches of time in the '90s due to serious concern over his health. He also had other health problems with vital organs that may have been related to steroid use, other drug use, or the disease. Hawk was an admitted steroid user for many years during his career. A study by the University of Michigan connected the use of steroids and cardiomyopathy. Said the report by Gary Stephnen Ferenchick: "Case reports have linked anabolic steroids with increased left ventricular mass, cardiomyopathy, and sudden death in weightlifters and other athletes." The National Library of Medicine, as far back as 1991, stated: "Cardiomyopathy associated with the misuse of anabolic steroids has to be considered especially in young, formerly healthy patients." Hegstrand's wife Dale says Hegstrand went to bed after feeling weak from a day of moving into their new home and didn't wake up. Hawk had become a Born Again Christian in recent years.
 

dogface

Registered STUD
Forum Member
Feb 13, 2000
2,719
22
0
54
Minnesota
The sad thing is these are good people, and to reach the pinnacle of their careers, they felt they had to do this.

Rick Rood graduated at around 166 or less lbs, and then went down south and hooked up with the Von Erichs, and came back rather large and cut....most of all of these athletes sadly wil de or are passing away because of a link to the steroids. Not an uncommom practice by any means, this is also rampant in may other sports professional or non, very sad!

TSI
 
Bet on MyBookie
Top